Join the weekly Classic Castle set review discussion. Please post your opinions on the set play ability, piece selection, design, etc. Which sets stand up to our catapult of critique and which ones crumble in shame!

This week’s set is 6099 Traitor Transport.

Traitor Transport was released in 1997 for the Fright Knights. A dragon pulls this prison wagon for traitors. A mounted knight, a driver, a prisoner knight and various accessories are included.

A premolded plastic "Dragon Cave" piece was included with this version of the 6047 set. The cave was not system compatible.

Traitor Transport has the distinction of being last possible number of the original 6000 series devoted to Castle sets.

I still have that huge ugly rock piece. I love this set just because I have it. Thinking about it, it's actually kinda poor... but I was always a fan of the Fright Knights minifigures. I've definitely gotten good mileage from them.

Outside of the black horse, the awesome barding and the nice torsos I have only one word to describe the set design:

YEEEEE-UCK!A plate with some wheels on it is a wagon? What's with those curved top bricks on the front of that thing? Say what you want about KKII but IMO, fright knights were the darkest times in LEGO castle. When in doubt, slap a dragon wing somewhere....

Trevor

Trust me, I think I'm funnier than you do.Why do I have to add the word "minifig" to my spell checker every time I use it?!

Looking at this set, I can understand why LEGO had in the past some big financial problems.If nowadays' sets would be of this quality, I wouldn't buy any LEGO.In any case thanks a lot for posting the set, because I didn't know it existed.

I think I got this for $14, which seems high in retrospect. At the time I was particularly hot for the horse barding, the grill helm Royal Knight and the Fright Knight footsoldier, the large wagon wheels, and a selection of the light gray parts in this set. Another thought I have here is that apart from the dragon wings all over the place, this carriage is none too different from many of the carriages of the KK2-Fantasy themes

I don't remember where the cave piece went too, but I am sure I still have it. I never used it, likely because I have bricks and BURPs.

There is no life I know to compare with pure imagination. Living there, you'll be free if you truly wish to be. -Willy Wonka, 1971-

I had never seen that weird cave piece before. I did get the set though and remember liking it quite a bit (must have been age 9 or so). Sure the wings were silly but the slopes on top of the wagon were quite neat and so were all the figs I daresay, also think it was one of my first grilled helmets having missed out on most of the Black Falcons and Crusaders in my childhood.

But that cave... wow, it really did bring a new dimension of weirdness to LEGO that I had never really imagined.

I remember when this set came out I kinda wanted the set and rock. But that was a long time ago and I'm ashamed . It's still not too bad of a set; decent pieces, and I did kind some of the fright knights such as basil and the fleur de les guy. I believe some people may not recall the cave as it was within a special edition (I think Ben mentioned that above). Quite similar to this UFO set with a helmet http://media.peeron.com/pics/inv/setpics/6999-1.1167617931.jpg. I think at the time though it was a pretty nice set with very high on the playability factor, even the plastic molded monstrosity.

That cave is an all time low. It looks more like Mega Bloks than LEGO I know, but I had to say it.The figs are OK, but you could buy the main castle thing (which I have) and get the barding and some good parts. No matter what the price, I wouldn't buy it.

"Humans build atomic bombs,﻿ but no mouse in the world would be stupid enough to design a mousetrap."- Albert Einstien

Not much to say about this beyond what I presumably said about the other version of this set. Just that HURP. Back when this came out, and back when I was a significantly (relatively speaking) younger person, I actually wanted this set for the HURP. To me, it provided a wealth of possiblites. You have to remember that this was all from a view that focused exclusively on the playing aspect of Lego. Even now, if I ever came across this piece, I would take, if only just to have a unique piece of Lego history.